Re: Surveillance Technology

mark@unicorn.com (mark@unicorn.com) writes:
>>And>>even if these methods would become available, that doesn't mean that>>criminals would actually use them; they're usually not the brightest>>individuals around. >>Uh, you can't use criminals who are caught to prove that criminals are >stupid, when most of the criminals who are stupid get caught and most of >the smart criminals don't. The law enforcement folks I've spoken to >certainly seem to be aware of that.

You only need a crude estimate of how sloppy the current system is at
catching stupid criminals to conclude that there are many such criminals
who could be deterred by better detection. Unless the improved detection
has a side effect of making it noticeably easier for smart criminals to
get away with crimes (as far as I can tell, widespread surveillance makes
crime trickier for almost any criminal), then the existence of smart
criminals is irrelevant to this debate.

Will your strategy of limiting surveillance reduce this problem?
I see three alternatives that people might aim for:

All privacy is eliminated, even for entering passwords in the privacy
of your home.
To the extent that governments remain democratic, this gives more
power to the majority of the people to impose their will on minorities.

Privacy is eliminated in public places, but remains possible in some
enclosed areas such as homes that are adequately sealed against cameras.
This appears to be the safest alternative, although it still has some
of the risks of the next alternative.

>>Furthermore, you can't fool an integrated surveillance system by >>"simply" dropping fake DNA or changing your face. You can't>>possibly find and modify all the relevant surveillance details (in>>time).>>Yes I can, because with universal global surveillance I can get any >information I want. Is this universal surveillance or isn't it? You >can't have things both ways.

>>I too dislike>>oppressive bureaucracies, but it doesn't make me blind to the fact>>that for society as it is now (with imperfect people), massive improvement>>cannot be achieved by abolishing the concept of the state.>>If people are imperfect, how can taking a group of imperfect people (and>politicians are generally much more imperfect than most) and giving them >a monopoly on power make things better?

mark@unicorn.com (mark@unicorn.com) writes:
>Michael Lorrey [retroman@together.net] wrote, with quotes from den Otter:>>I think that it would be possible for there to be programs which filter video >content>>in a similar manner to the way the NSA computers filter phone traffic. >Obviously, it>>would be easy to set cameras to not record data they are viewing when nobody >>is in viewing range.>>But this totally invalidates his argument; if you're not recording >everything, then who knows what's going on? And if you're filtering for >"good stuff", then crooks can find out what you filter for and use that >to avoid being caught.

As the quality of the filtering software improves, I'd expect that crooks
will increasing see that the most cost-effective way to avoid getting
caught is to avoid committing a crime. A first approximation to the filtering
algorithm would be to only look at scenes which contain a human.
I can imagine continually increasing sophistication in realtime image
analysis makes it increasingly easy to distinguish normal activities from
unusual events, so that the kind of crimes that people fear today will be
increasingly hard to get away with.

>>> Of course, *any* system can>>> be corrupted, but it can be made extremely difficult to do and keeping>>> the takeover hidden would be harder still.>>Uh, there is no question that the US government has been "taken over"; the